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Rape victim threatened with lawsuit PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Sunday, 02 May 2010 12:38
After six years of a man convicted of raping her began serving a long prison term, a woman says Nashville lawyer local security company and threatened to sue her unless paid one million dollars.

The woman went to court as Jane Doe, asked the judge to keep the Brentwood patrol company to be identified if the following through the threat of litigation. She added that the company was seeking to recover the settlement proceeds it paid them after appeals 2004 for Janosky Lauren on charges of kidnapping and rape.
 

He was working for a security guard patrols Janosky Brentwood wearing military uniforms on the night of August 3, 2002 when the rape. He admitted later he walked out on the woman's car, handcuffed her and took her swimming and tennis club in the Sequoia Forest Hills, where she was raped.

In its complaint, filed earlier this month at the Embassy Davidson County Court and available at this link, the woman said: Nashville attorney David Zager group sent her a "demand" on behalf of the company last November. In an envelope and found a lawsuit unfiled draft that called and the defendant, together with statements which he accused of "lying about being raped," she says in a court filing it.

Included in the package were "hand-written letters with dates apparently from May 4, 2003 to January 7, 2009, purporting to be from Ms. Janosky, Mr. Du's in prison," the U.S. women. "Application package implicitly threatening to reveal the identity of Ms. de Brentwood only to pay the regular amount of 1 million dollars."

Doe legal complaint describes the characters and contains "a series of Walking sexual fantasies interspersed with confessions." They say it contains "terrible spelling" and "Rules of impropriety." Doe describes itself in the document and graduated from high school in Nashville and a private college for four years, as well as "a member of a prominent Nashville family, which was often in the news."

Characters, she says, "contain almost any personal information that will allow them to be verified." Insists that it "false and forged." And says it has "reason to believe that Mr. Janosky and / or its partners write letters."

The material was sent to a woman who is not part of a general issue, but allowed her lawyer - John Belcher, Jordan Keller and Catherine Butcher Lasseter, establishment, Davis, Keller and Hogan - for some of the documentation file sealed.

Doe asked the court to impose a temporary restraining order to prevent Brentwood periodicals and Zager of the label in the legal papers or otherwise disclose their identity. She also asked for the right to amend this complaint "to seek additional relief as required by events in the future."

Chancellor Carol McCoy issued a restraining order immediately after Zager told the court that his client had no objection to that.



As of now, Brentwood Patrol did not provide a lawsuit against the women. Zager issued the following statement to NashvillePost.com yesterday: "We are investigating the allegations and the factual circumstances of this matter. Brentwood patrols company is sensitive to the rights of all parties concerned and had no comment at this time."

Janosky previously announced in the state and federal appeals of his conviction that women were sent a single letter, in October 2004.
In one handwritten filing, describing the letter as being accompanied by "seductive images only victim back to back, but the name printed on the picture" as well as

Another prisoner said in the filing that the victim, who wrote "She was sorry for all that it put me through, but [it] is a term not read back in my face and after he was convicted took this advantage to file a lawsuit against the city were stopped in, but asking for forgiveness does not care in an attempt to persuade anyone about this message, no one will believe me, "as well as

(Doe did not sue the city of hills, forests as well as patrols Brentwood. Both cases were settled for undisclosed sums. The results of a third lawsuit it filed against the club's Sequoia, it is not clear from public records.)



Janosky federal court appeal of habeas corpus and inactive for almost two years, but on March 11 - the same day, Doe filed Patrol Brentwood - Federal Attorney-General there Lenahan submitted a document under seal in this case.

Ask the judge to keep the deposit of sealed, Lenahan wrote that "in this case, to be deposited and sealed document contains sensitive or confidential information." No details of the filing of a document may be.


 

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